4.0 Article

Single slice thigh CT muscle group segmentation with domain adaptation and self-training

Journal

JOURNAL OF MEDICAL IMAGING
Volume 10, Issue 4, Pages -

Publisher

SPIE-SOC PHOTO-OPTICAL INSTRUMENTATION ENGINEERS
DOI: 10.1117/1.JMI.10.4.044001

Keywords

computed tomography; magnetic resonance; thigh muscle segmentation; single slice; domain adaptation; self-training

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This study proposes an unsupervised domain adaptation pipeline that transfers labels from three-dimensional magnetic resonance (MR) images to single-slice CT thigh images for muscle group segmentation. The pipeline effectively and robustly extracts muscle groups on two-dimensional single-slice CT thigh images.
Purpose Thigh muscle group segmentation is important for assessing muscle anatomy, metabolic disease, and aging. Many efforts have been put into quantifying muscle tissues with magnetic resonance (MR) imaging, including manual annotation of individual muscles. However, leveraging publicly available annotations in MR images to achieve muscle group segmentation on single-slice computed tomography (CT) thigh images is challenging. Approach We propose an unsupervised domain adaptation pipeline with self-training to transfer labels from three-dimensional MR to single CT slices. First, we transform the image appearance from MR to CT with CycleGAN and feed the synthesized CT images to a segmenter simultaneously. Single CT slices are divided into hard and easy cohorts based on the entropy of pseudo-labels predicted by the segmenter. After refining easy cohort pseudo-labels based on anatomical assumption, self-training with easy and hard splits is applied to fine-tune the segmenter. Results On 152 withheld single CT thigh images, the proposed pipeline achieved a mean Dice of 0.888 (0.041) across all muscle groups, including gracilis, hamstrings, quadriceps femoris, and sartorius muscle. Conclusions To our best knowledge, this is the first pipeline to achieve domain adaptation from MR to CT for thigh images. The proposed pipeline effectively and robustly extracts muscle groups on two-dimensional single-slice CT thigh images. The container is available for public use in GitHub repository available at: https://github.com/MASILab/DA_CT_muscle_seg. (c) 2023 Society of Photo- Optical Instrumentation Engineers (SPIE)

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